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Further Workplace Health and Safety bosses will be grilled at the inquest into the Dreamworld disaster today, after a leading inspector admitted he had "no confidence" in the emergency procedures in place on the Thunder River Rapids ride.

Knight seeks sentence plan order

Hoddle Street mass murderer Julian Knight stands in a category by himself when it comes to prison management because of his crimes, a barrister for corrections authorities has told a court.

Knight, who is jailed for life with a non-parole period of 27 years, has taken Corrections Victoria to court to seek an order that they formulate a sentence plan for him and provide him with a copy of it.

He will become eligible for parole in two years and two months and wants to be moved out of maximum security so he can begin the process of getting parole.

Corrections Victoria barrister Peter Hanks QC told the Victorian Supreme Court on Wednesday Knight "stands in a category by himself ... because of the nature of the offence for which he has been convicted".

Mr Hanks said one report noted Knight needed a considerable level of supervision and monitoring.

But Knight, who killed seven people and wounded 19 in the 1987 shooting spree in Melbourne known as the Hoddle Street massacre, told the court there had been "bias and unreasonableness" by Corrections Victoria in relation to his classification.

He said he was given medium security status in June 1999 but remained in maximum security.

Knight said he remains an A2 categorised maximum security prisoner, which is the same rating he had in Pentridge Prison in 1989.

He said there were only two other people in Victoria who had remained in maximum security since the 1980s - double murderer and rapist Raymond "Mr Stinky" Edmunds and seven-time killer Paul Steven Haigh.

"Corrections Victoria seems to have a policy with respect to myself of get nothing, go nowhere," Knight told the court.

He said a requirement that he undergo psychological and psychiatric testing before his sentencing review could be determined was stonewalling his attempts for a review of his status.

"It is a smokescreen they are placing up, Your Honour, to disguise what essentially is stonewalling," Knight said.

Knight will be permitted to cross-examine senior Corrections Victoria manager Brendan Money when the trial before Justice Katharine Williams continues on Thursday.